Schwarzenegger, Brown Hit the Road to Promote Passage of Props. 1A Through 1F

ALAMEDA — Fighting discouraging poll numbers for the May 19 Special Election initiatives (Props. 1A through 1F), Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Attorney General Jerry Brown
appeared Tuesday morning in front of an East Bay fire station saying
that voters must pass the propositions or risk throwing the state into
further economic chaos.

The
powerful political odd couple, who wouldn’t normally be able to agree
on the time of day, were in lockstep in their promotion of the
propositions, themselves a product of the strained and extended budget
negotiations that finally gave the state a spending plan and which
theoretically closed a yawning $28 billion deficit.

The presidents of the California State Sheriff’s and Police
Chiefs associations and Alameda City Fire Department Division Chief
Mike Fisher were also present.

“Should these initiatives not pass there would be
immediate cuts in the billions of dollars to programs that support our
children,” Brown said.

Schwarzenegger
said that should the package fail at the ballot box, the state
would be looking at an immediate $14 billion deficit that would force
not only draconian cuts to children’s services but public safety,
education and healthcare programs as well.

Brown,
who is exploring a possible gubernatorial bid in 2010 (he served two
pre-term-limit era stints as governor from 1975 to 1983) agreed.

“[These
propositions] are not perfect, but our problems will grow bigger if
they are not passed by the voters,” Brown said. “To me, this is a
no-brainer. [This is] an incremental response to an immediate crisis.”

But political bi-partisan star-power aside, the Schwarzenegger-Brown duo are running up against the powerful Service Employees International Union and the California Federation of Teachers, which are both opposing Prop. 1A. A recent Public Policy Institute of California
poll showed that with the exception of Prop. 1F (which would stop state
lawmakers from receiving pay raises during years when the state is
running a deficit) the remainder of initiatives have received only
lukewarm support from the state’s likely voters.Budget
Reform Now officials, however, dispute the findings of the March 25
PPIC survey, calling into question the statistical models the
non-partisan San Francisco-based institution used.

“One
thing the PPIC (survey) makes clear is that voters are not happy with
the economy, their elected leaders or the state budget. This presents
us with an opportunity to communicate a strong message to voters
centered around the theme that Propositions 1A through 1F are about
bringing both short and long term reform and stability to all three of
these areas,” said Budget Reform Now’s Rick Claussen in a March 25 memo
distributed to the news media Tuesday.

Jeff Mitchell is a Bay Area based journalist and longtime observer of Golden State politics.